Aviva Plc, the British insurer, is in advanced talks on a sale of its Italian operations as it pushes ahead with about €6bn ($7.3bn) of divestments, people with knowledge said.
The UK company is in negotiations to sell its Italian life insurance business to Paris-based CNP Assurances, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. Allianz SE is in talks to acquire Aviva’s general insurance unit in the country, the people said.
A deal could be reached within a few weeks, the people said. The two disposals in Italy could fetch more than €1bn combined, the people said.
Shares of Aviva rose as much as 3.1% in morning trading yesterday. They were up 2.8% at 9:49am in London, on track for the highest close in almost a year, while the benchmark FTSE 100 Index gained 1.4%. No final agreements have been reached, and discussions could still fall apart, they said.
The sale is part of Aviva chief executive officer Amanda Blanc’s plan to improve the London-listed insurer’s struggling share price by offloading non-core assets. Blanc has wasted little time since taking the helm in July, agreeing to sell a majority stake in its Singapore business for about $2bn and pushing ahead with the disposal of its units in Poland and Italy. She’s also exploring options for Aviva’s joint venture in Turkey.
Meanwhile, French mutual insurer Macif has emerged as the frontrunner to acquire Aviva’s insurance operations in the country, the people said. Macif is seen as the most suitable buyer for the unit, which could fetch more than €3bn, because it’s a local player, the people said.
Macif is competing against French private equity firm Eurazeo SE, said the people. Eurazeo was a latecomer to the auction and there could be some hesitation to sell to private equity, they said.
For Macif, a purchase of Aviva France would be its biggest-ever deal. Eurazeo has been holding talks with Italy’s Assicurazioni Generali SpA about potentially teaming up, the people said. Eurazeo, one of Europe’s few listed buyout firms, sees Aviva France as a strategic investment that would elevate its €18.8bn in assets under management, according to one person. Eurazeo, led by Virginie Sarah Morgon, has a market value of €4.9bn.
A consortium of Allianz and Athora has been sidelined due to resistance to the latter firm’s links to American private equity, the people said.
Private equity firms buy life insurers to attract permanent capital in a bid to diversify from buyout strategies. They invest the cash flows from policies into illiquid assets to boost returns and cut costs by boosting scale.
Aviva, which hasn’t yet decided on a winner, could reach an agreement as early as this month, the people said. The French business generated £13.4bn ($18.5bn) of revenue in 2019, about 20% of the group’s total, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Allianz, Generali and Dutch insurer NN Group NV are among parties that expressed interest in Aviva’s Polish business, which could fetch about €1.5bn to €2bn, the people said.
Representatives for Allianz, Athora, Aviva, CNP, Eurazeo, Generali and Macif declined to comment. A spokesperson for NN couldn’t immediately be reached.
Mergers and acquisitions in the European insurance industry are being driven by companies looking to bulk up their property and casualty businesses while selling interest-rate dependent life units. Insurance deals worth $64bn have been struck in the region during the last 12 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s up 62% year-on-year, the data show.